It's somehow fitting that nature provides the
light for God's houses.
Inside a tiny hut, by the light of a solitary
bulb, Bishop Varlaam melts blocks of the highest
quality beeswax from Alberta's Peace River region.
The bishop presides over the candle factory,
dedicated to the protection of Saint Vasili of
Ostrog, at New Ostrog, the Canadian Orthodox
Monastery of All Saints of North America.
The wax - processed without heat to preserve
most of that distinctive honey fragrance - arrives
by the ton several times a year.
Large blocks are placed in the candle factory,
piled higher than Bishop Varlaam's waist and wider
than he is tall.
He spends three to four days a week in the
factory, melting beeswax, dipping wicks and forming
candles destined for sanctuaries.
From just before Christmas and lasting until
February - through most of the church's feast days
- demand is higher and the bishop makes candles
five or six days a week.
Although most of Bishop Varlaam's candles go to
light the Orthodox churches in British Columbia,
some go farther afield, as far north as Orthodox
churches in a group of Alaskan islands in the
Bering Sea.
An "assembly line" is set up by the bishop,
who dips hundreds of candles.
Above, Bishop Varlaam dips the wicks into the
wax to form the thin altar candles.
The large blocks of beeswax can be seen stacked on the right.